Buckhorn: Access to paid parental leave makes Tampa more competitive

Tampa is competing with cities around the world. We compete for investment, for jobs, and for business but the most important thing we compete for is a talented workforce. The intellectual capital of today, the brightest young minds and innovators, can live...

Buckhorn: Access to paid parental leave makes Tampa more competitive

Tampa is competing with cities around the world. We compete for investment, for jobs, and for business but the most important thing we compete for is a talented workforce. The intellectual capital of today, the brightest young minds and innovators, can live anywhere they choose yet more and more are choosing Tampa.

1 Week Ago

6 Months Ago

6 Months Ago

Last week I announced that the City of Tampa will begin providing paid parental leave to our full-time workers. Attracting and retaining the most talented workforce does not solely lie in downtown amenities and adding jobs, it also requires providing a 21st Century workplace for 21st Century families.

Access to paid leave after the birth of a new child has been shown to offer wide ranging health benefits for mothers and for children including increased birth weight, a decrease in premature births, and leads to a substantial decrease in infant mortality.

Access to parental leave increases the likelihood that mothers return to work and continue progressing in their careers. Recent research based on California's paid paternity leave policy suggests that access to paid maternity leave increased the weekly hours and wages of employed mothers of toddlers by nearly 10 perfcent.

Our new parental leave policy will provide primary caregivers with eight weeks and secondary caregivers with two weeks of paid leave following the birth or adoption of a new child. This allows parents, mothers and fathers, to take the time they need to bond with and care for their new child. Families should never be faced with the arduous decision of whether to take those critical first weeks home with their families or put food on their table.

The benefits to business are equally abounding as the benefits to health and families. Providing paid parental leave will improve the city's ability to recruit and retain talent, decrease worker turnover, and boost productivity. Offering new benefits is never free; there will be a minimal impact to our bottom line, but we are focused on the long-term benefits to our workforce and research shows that the net gains of establishing family friendly workplace policies far outweigh those of short-term cost saving measures.

Far too often, paid parental leave is viewed as a women's issue. Today women make up nearly half of the American workforce. In four out of 10 American families with children, mothers are the primary or sole earners — a number that has quadrupled since 1960 and is now the highest on record. Outdated workplace policies that make life harder for women make life harder for families and harder for children. These policies affect our economic competitiveness as cities, as businesses and as a nation.

As the husband of an accomplished medical professional and the father of two daughters who I hope will go on to lead fulfilling and promising careers of their own, I am committed to making it easier for the women and men who work for me to also balance the needs of their families. I understand innately the importance of time to bond and care for a new child in the first few weeks of their arrival. I remember vividly the first weeks with my daughters and how much effort it took to manage the careers of my wife and myself as new parents.

We live in a country that offers the most incredible opportunities for our children and yet still lags behind the world in prioritizing time with our families. We are the only advanced nation that fails to provide wide ranging paid parental leave for our workers.

In the city of Tampa, we are doing our part to lead on paid parental leave.

Our 4,300 workers at the city of Tampa are the backbone of this community. They support all of us every day. You put your trash out, it gets picked up, potholes get filled, and water keeps running. Today, I am making a commitment to support them. I urge other employers to follow my lead. Parental leave, child care and the like are not women's issues — they are economic issues. The progress we make on this front will directly impact our competitiveness on the global stage.

Bob Buckhorn is the mayor of Tampa. Follow @BobBuckhorn

Our editors found this article on this site using Google and regenerated it for our readers.

NEXT NEWS